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A list of generations that have made up our 250-year-old American experiment...
Posted on 11/29/25 at 2:05 pm
Posted on 11/29/25 at 2:05 pm
In honor of the 250th anniversary of our Revolution and the founding of our Grand Republic, here is a list of the generations who have all contributed (for better and for worse) to the American Experience:
1. The Republican Generation (1742-1766): These men and women founded the United States of America.
2. The Compromise Generation (1767-1791): These men and women were involved in many of our nation's first great compromises and the consolidation of American power.
3. The Transcendental Generation (1792-1821): These were our Romantic idealists, abolitionists, and Transcendentalists.
4. The Gilded Generation (1822-1842): These men and women fought in the American Civil War and became robber barons as well as speculators.
5. The Progressive Generation (1843-1859): Likewise involved with the Civil War and Reconstruction, they became pragmatic institution-builders.
6. The Missionary Generation (1860-1882): Moral crusaders who added that extra "umph" to the Progressive Generation's causes.
7. The Lost Generation (1883-1900): Veterans of the Great War and victims of the Spanish Flu as well as the Great Depression.
8. The G.I. Generation (1901-1926): Known popularly as the "Greatest Generation." They won World War II, built post-war America, and were known for their "can do" spirit.
9. The Silent Generation (1927-1945): Conformists, risk averse, came of age under the shadow of the Great Depression and World War II.
10. The Baby Boom Generation (1946-1964): Known for the massive counterculture that erupted in the 1960s, idealistic and values-driven. Started the so-called "culture wars."
11. Generation X (1965-1981): Pragmatic, skeptical of institutions, known for grunge and entrepreneurship.
12. Generation Y (1982-1996): Popularly known as "Millennials." These are digital natives, anxious, and civic-minded.
13. Generation Z (1997-2012): Popularly known as "Zoomers." Grew up in the shadow of 9/11, always online, and noted for their protected childhoods.
14. Generation Alpha (2013-Present): Near-constant social media presence, rebellious, growing up in the shadow of the AI revolution.
1. The Republican Generation (1742-1766): These men and women founded the United States of America.
2. The Compromise Generation (1767-1791): These men and women were involved in many of our nation's first great compromises and the consolidation of American power.
3. The Transcendental Generation (1792-1821): These were our Romantic idealists, abolitionists, and Transcendentalists.
4. The Gilded Generation (1822-1842): These men and women fought in the American Civil War and became robber barons as well as speculators.
5. The Progressive Generation (1843-1859): Likewise involved with the Civil War and Reconstruction, they became pragmatic institution-builders.
6. The Missionary Generation (1860-1882): Moral crusaders who added that extra "umph" to the Progressive Generation's causes.
7. The Lost Generation (1883-1900): Veterans of the Great War and victims of the Spanish Flu as well as the Great Depression.
8. The G.I. Generation (1901-1926): Known popularly as the "Greatest Generation." They won World War II, built post-war America, and were known for their "can do" spirit.
9. The Silent Generation (1927-1945): Conformists, risk averse, came of age under the shadow of the Great Depression and World War II.
10. The Baby Boom Generation (1946-1964): Known for the massive counterculture that erupted in the 1960s, idealistic and values-driven. Started the so-called "culture wars."
11. Generation X (1965-1981): Pragmatic, skeptical of institutions, known for grunge and entrepreneurship.
12. Generation Y (1982-1996): Popularly known as "Millennials." These are digital natives, anxious, and civic-minded.
13. Generation Z (1997-2012): Popularly known as "Zoomers." Grew up in the shadow of 9/11, always online, and noted for their protected childhoods.
14. Generation Alpha (2013-Present): Near-constant social media presence, rebellious, growing up in the shadow of the AI revolution.
This post was edited on 11/29/25 at 2:06 pm
Posted on 11/29/25 at 2:08 pm to RollTide1987
Generation beta began this year.
Posted on 11/29/25 at 2:10 pm to RollTide1987
The Lost Generation were the grizzled oldtimers that GenXers remember from our childhood. WW1 vets.
Posted on 11/29/25 at 2:14 pm to genuineLSUtiger
quote:
WW1 vets.
more so Korean "conflict" vets
Posted on 11/29/25 at 2:19 pm to RollTide1987
quote:
Generation X
quote:
known for grunge
quote:
Generation Y
quote:
known for digital narratives
quote:
Generation Z
quote:
always online
quote:
Generation Alpha
quote:
constant online media presence
Glad I'll be dead before they lead the country
Posted on 11/29/25 at 2:22 pm to RollTide1987
My wife and I are late X (78 & 81). My children are Z (98 & 10) and Alpha (13). I would say my 27 yr old is more Millennial than Z. It is definitely different raising them vs how I was raised.
Posted on 11/29/25 at 2:37 pm to kywildcatfanone
quote:
Glad I'll be dead before they lead the country
Can’t be worse than silent gen or boomers.
Posted on 11/29/25 at 3:00 pm to RollTide1987
Millennials are civic minded? They seem pretty selfish to me.
Posted on 11/29/25 at 3:03 pm to RollTide1987
Boomers definitely the worst of the bunch
Posted on 11/29/25 at 3:04 pm to RollTide1987
quote:
1. The Republican Generation (1742-1766): These men and women founded the United States of America.
quote:
11. Generation X (1965-1981): Pragmatic, skeptical of institutions, known for grunge and entrepreneurship.
I'm mixed about which one of these were the coolest.
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